digital religion

 

A NEW PHASE in our Digital Religion work: The Center for Religion and Media at NYU has received funding from the Henry R. Luce Initiative on Religion in International Affairs for a new project on  RELIGIOUS STAKES IN DIGITAL TIMES: SCHOLARS AND JOURNALISTS IN CONVERSATION. We plan to invite one post-doctoral fellow each academic year for three years, beginning in September 2016. Watch for our call for applications soon! Details of the project follow below, as well as links to our previous initiative in Digital Religion.

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Religious Stakes in Digital Times: Scholars and Journalists in conversation will initiate new work on the role of religion in international affairs. Carrying forward an evolving sense of what “international” means, we will foster new research, writing, and exchange on the role of religion in the world today. We understand “international” to mean something that comprises both us and them, inextricably linked by, and overflowing beyond, borders that are increasingly blurred through digital instantaneous communication. Religious experience, like so many other forms of experience in a digitally linked world, travels fast, and travels globally.  This insight has, in turn, prompted us to enlarge our original “international frame” to include explicitly American religious life:  It’s time to think of everyone, ourselves especially, as international, as interlinked in the digital world. Tracking this linkage through religion is crucial. We are convinced that one cannot overlook the importance of experience on the ground or the knowledge acquired through deep study—the human, corporeal elements brought by journalists and scholars to broadening our understanding of religion in an internationalizing, globalizing world.

Joining us in conversation about religious stakes in digital times will be scholars and journalists who are able to take a step back and write thoughtfully and critically about what we talk about when we talk about religion. The grant will allow us not only to continue publication of The Revealer: a review of religion and media, published by The Center for Religion and Media since 2003, but to invite into the Center a new post-doctoral fellow each academic year for three years to write and program with us.  We will seek scholars with projects in hand who want to engage with other academics, journalists, and activists as part of their work. 

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Digital Religion: Knowledge, Politics and Practice, (September 2011- August 2013) also funded by Luce, studied how religion intertwines with the update of digital/social media in recent unprecedented social and political transformations—in in particular but not exclusively in the Middle East, North Africa, and Central and Southeast Asia–along with the implications of these developments for international relations.   After originally underwriting the project for an exploratory workshop in March 2010, Luce awarded the Center a two-year grant for this further work.

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Religion in the Digital Age II: Mediating ‘The Human’ in a Globalizing Asia
September 27th & 28th, 2013

This conference explored religious and ethically-driven digital mediations shaping and shaped by globalization in Asia, from documentary and feature film, to innovations in digital storytelling and online activism.

Read the abstracts and participant bios.

 
Spring 2013
Digital Dharma

February 14, 2013, 5-7 pm

When ancient writings of Sanskrit and Tibetan texts vanish during the political turmoil of the 1950s and 1960s, the history of a whole society is in danger of disappearing. Scholar E. Gene Smith devoted his life to working with Tibetan Lamas and others in rescuing these texts, culminating in a digital archive.

This event consisted of a screening of the film Digital Dharma, directed by Dafna Yachin, followed by a discussion with Executive Producer Bill Harris; Laura Harrington (Religion Department, Boston University); and Robbie Barnett (Modern Tibet Studies Program, Columbia University).

Co-sponsored by NYU Abu Dhabi, the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies and the Asian/Pacific/American Institute. With generous support from the Henry R. Luce initiative on Religion & International Affairs.

 

Digital Judaism: Tablet To Tablet

April 25, 2013, 5-7 pm

 
How have digital technologies entered Jewish life, changing ideas of moral authority, community, gender, education and more? This panel discussed how social media — Jewish gaming, Hasidic blogging, orthodox Facebook sites — are changing ideas of moral authority, community, gendered subjectivity and more, while transforming possibilities for Jewish communities in the worlds around them.
 
 
Ayala Fader Anthropology, Fordham
Owen Gottlieb Steinhardt, NYU
Rachel Wagner Religion, Ithaca College
Jeffrey Shandler Jewish Studies, Rutgers
 

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Co-sponsored by NYU Abu Dhabi. With generous support from the Henry R. Luce initiative on Religion & International Affairs.

 

Fall 2012 Events
Back Stories/Front Pages: Palestinian Politics and American News

October 11, 2012 | 5:00-7:00 PM

Amahl Bishara Anthropology, Tufts University
Helga Tawil-Souri Media, Culture and Communication, NYU

Bishara talked about her new book on Palestinian journalists who contribute to U.S. news behind the scenes.

Co-sponsored by NYU Abu Dhabi, The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies; Media Culture and Communication

 

The Light in Her Eyes

October 18, 2012 | 5:00-7:00 PM

Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix, filmmakers

A documentary on Houda al-Habash, the founder of a Syrian Qur’an girls’ school that challenges students to live Islamic lives without giving up their dreams.

Co-sponsored by The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies and NYU Abu Dhabi

 

Religion in the Digital Age: Media, Performance and “Spectacular Activism”

4th Annual Conference for the Mediating Religion Network
June 24-26, 2012

Religion, politics, and performance have been deeply intertwined with the contemporary circulation of media in the recent unprecedented social and political upheavals in the Middle East, North Africa, and the burgeoning Occupy movements throughout the world. We have seen public spaces transformed into contested arenas for staking political and ethical claims on the body politic through creative performances, ranging from the dramatic to the comedic. These and other sites of “spectacular activism” gripped the public imagination, as have prior movements such as Gandhian satyagraha, the American Civil Rights movement, and the role of Buddhist monks in the Burmese Saffron revolution. This conference welcomed analysis of the role of religion in mediated performances of all sorts in these and other local political and cultural movements that garnered attention on the world stage.

Read more about the presenters and their abstracts.

 

Spring 2012 Events
Blogistan and Beyond: Religion, the Internet, and Politics in Iran

February 17, 2012 | 6:00-7:30 PM

Annabelle Sreberny Professor of Global Media and Communications, The School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Hamid Dabashi Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
Narges Bajoghli Department of Anthropology, NYU
Arang Keshavarzian Associate Professor of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, NYU

What role have social media and the Internet played in the ongoing political negotiations among conservative Muslims, moderates, and secularists in contemporary Iran? How have these new digital initiatives launched an awareness of cultural activists on the world stage? Simultaneously, such visibility also has put people’s lives in danger, especially in the wake of the 2009 elections. How have these developments led to new forms of digital creativity?

Co-sponsored by The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies and NYU Abu Dhabi

 

Tahrir Square, 2012: The Voices of Women and Religious Minorities

March 1, 2012 | 6:30-8:00 PM

Viola Shafik Freelance Lecturer and Filmmaker
Yasmin Moll Department of Anthropology, NYUNY
Mona Eltahawy Awarding-Winning Journalist
Dina Ramadan Assistant Professor of Arabic, Bard College

In the year following Egyptian revolution, peaceful demonstrations gave way to increasingly violent and sectarian strife. Digital films and social media documented and brought to the wider public’s attention the experiences of women and minority populations in Egypt’s ever-changing social and political climate. This panel brought together filmmakers, journalists, and analysts to discuss the recent past and potential future of the country and how social and digital media continues to impact and frame the course of events.

Co-sponsored by The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies and NYU Abu Dhabi

 

Fall 2011 Events
Media, Islam and the New Arab Journalist

October 5, 2011 | 6:30-8:00 PM

Lawrence Pintak Dean, Edward R. Murrow College of Communications, Washington State University
Mohammed El-Nawawy Department of Communications, Queens University of Charlotte
Mohamad Bazzi Assistant Professor of Journalism, NYU; Adjunct Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations

The Arab media representing much of the Muslim world are in the midst of a revolution that will inform questions of the transforming role of religion, war and peace, political and societal reform, and relations between the West and the Arab World. How do Arab journalists see themselves and their mission in this critical time in the evolution of a diverse Arab media landscape? What role does the Arab media play — particularly in a seemingly borderless digital age — in representing a Muslim world regarded with suspicion by the West to that part of the world, and in representing the complex and competing understanding of Islam in Muslim nations.

Co-sponsored by The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies and NYU Abu Dhabi

 

Silencing the Song: An Afghan Fallen Star

November 4, 2011 | 6:30-8:00 PM

Havana Marking Director of Afghan Star (2009), Silencing the Song (2010)
David B. Edwards W. Van Alan Clark ’41 Third Century Professor in the Social Sciences, Williams College
Wazhmah Osman Social Science Research Council, NYUNY

The documentary Silencing the Song: An Afghan Fallen Star (Havana Marking, 2010) follows Setara Hussainzada after her ill-fated appearance on the popular Tolo TV show Afghan Star, when she scandalized the country by dancing — modestly — and allowing her scarf to drop to her neck, leading to death threats from conservative Muslims. Even in the urban capital of Kabul there was constant harassment, including by the local authorities fully backed by the USA as a counterweight to the misogynist Taliban. Her story, carefully explored in this acclaimed film, embodies longstanding tensions regarding the place of Islam and the presence of women in Afghanistan’s emerging and rapidly expanding public sphere, from television to digital media. A screening of the film was followed by a panel discussion.

Co-sponsored by The Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies and NYU Abu Dhabi

 

2010 Digital Religion: Transforming Knowledge and Practice